Darrell Hammond opens up about drug and alcohol battles

Funnyman Darrell Hammond has opened up about his long battle with drugs and alcohol in a revealing new memoir.

The former “Saturday Night Live” regular is sharing details about his personal life and abusive childhood in the book “God, If You’re Not Up There, I’m F**ked.”

In an excerpt, obtained by the New York Post, he writes, “I kept a pint of Remy (Martin cognac) in my desk at work. The drinking calmed my nerves and quieted the disturbing images that sprang into my head… when drinking didn’t work, I cut myself.”

And in 1998, Hammond confesses he was in such bad shape, he was admitted to the New York Hospital after being removed from the NBC TV studios in a straitjacket.

But his addictions only grew worse in 2002.

He continues, “I’d started adding an obscene amount of cocaine to my binges… I had to be creative about how I did it without other people catching or letting it interfere with the work. At least too much.”

Hammond entered rehab in a bid to get clean but in 2009 he relapsed after stumbling upon the “brilliant idea” to try crack. He later spent time in a New York City crack house before finally finding a path to sobriety.